Thermal indicators in milk, which had been subjected to one of the six indu
strial processes of thermization, pasteurization, direct and indirect UHT-s
terilization, pre-sterilization and in-bottle sterilization, were studied.
The following three indices of heat damage were analyzed by high performanc
e liquid chromatography (HPLC), hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF), lactulose and
acid-soluble beta-lactoglobulin(beta-LG). Average amounts found were 1710 m
g/L of beta-LG and 2.49 mu mol/L of HMF in pasteurized milk. In UHT milk, t
he amounts for direct and indirect processes were 389 and 322 mg/L of beta-
LG, 12.0 and 250 mg/L of lactulose and 5.6 and 8.7 mu mol/L of HMF. In ster
ilized milk the amounts were 1120 mg/L of lactulose and 22 mu mol/L of HMF,
without any detectable presence of undenatured whey proteins. On the basis
of the time/temperature profiles, a sterilization factor, expressed as sec
onds, was defined for each thermal treatment. By applying discriminant anal
ysis each industrial process could be classified independently at the 95% c
onfidence level (pasteurization, UHT-treatment and in-bottle sterilization)
, but direct-UHT treated milk could not be discriminated from indirect-UHT
milk, nor thermized milk from raw bulk milk. The simultaneous application o
f several heat-induced parameters improves the classification of industrial
processed milks, and is therefore a useful tool for optimization of the pr
ocessing conditions.